Maroon |
Previous | 1 of 8 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
The Loyola Maroon No. 2 LOYOLA UNIVERSITY, NEW ORLEANS, OCTOBER 10, 1952 VOL. XXX, X-259 Vote On SC Representatives Starts Monday 49 Students Nominated In Large Poll Turnout More than 350 students from five colleges of the university turned out this week to nominate for Student Council elections next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Nominees in arts and sciences are Anthony Cabibi, Tom Goodman, Tom McGee, and Louis Dudoussat, president. Betsie Prados and Pat McCarthy, junior representative. Gene Palmisano, Martha Mongeau, Don Baradell, Frank Newman, Ted Pfister, Butsy Zimme rni a mi, Fred Lipps, Odessa Elston, Marilyn Arnoult, Marie Reynoud, Ed Galvin, sophomore representative. Of these one president, one junior representative, and four sophomore representatives will be elected. Business Administration nominated Ralph Redmann and Gene Hymel, president; Jamee Quaid and Betty Hanford, junior representative; Ronald Redmann, Jim Finnegan, Joe Park and Margaret Brignac, sophomore representa-* tive. One president, one junior representative and two sophomore representatives will be elected. Nominations in law school • tand: Ken Wat 1c ins and Blake Arata, president; Albert Karre, Henry Mestayer, Gerald Steward, and Nuny Callofjero, junior representatives; Mike O'Keefe, Frank Varela, John Peytavin, Frank Shea and Norris Flramorris. sophomore representatives. One president, junior end sophomore representative will be elected. Nominees in pharmacy are: Jerry Patton and John Charles Drouillhet, president; Ola Morgan and John Hite, junior representative; George Hall, Allen Barilleaux, Edward Bopp, and John Mayes, sophomore representative. One president, one junior representative and two sophomore representatives will be elected. Music school nominated Bill THE CROWD TURNS THUMBS DOWN on the poor freshman at MELVIN GRAZIANO, portraying Nero, okay» a fro»h sentence. GEORGE KELLY, the Roman soldier on the right, prepares to deliver the coup-de-grace, at Kangaroo Kourt, last week in the quadrangle. BUBBY MAURIN planned the spectacle. And it was just that. Roland Hymel New Cadet Colonel Roland Hymel, business administration senior, has been appointed cadet colonel of Loyola's first ROTC regiment, according to Lt. Col. Luther R. Barth, commandant.Hymel was a GSC record holder in track, second in the nation in collegiate archery, finance officer of the Provost Corps, treasurer of SAM, and a member of SAK, PKE and the St. Aloysius Sodality. Lt. Cols. Buddy Laughlin, AAS aenior, and Ray Praesifka, BA senior, have been named commanderi of the two battalions comprising the regiment. Change from the one-battalion, formerly used, to the regimental formation will give more ROTC students command experience, Berth said. The Lt. Col. has also announced BUDDY LAUGHLIN ROLAND HYMEL RAY PRAESIFKA Non-Loyola Letters Prohibited By SC Students are reminded of the Student Council ruling that no letters except those of Loyola are to worn on the campus. You are Loyola students now. This is a Student Council regulation and must not be ignored. Millie Makofsky Pep Club Prexy Millie Makofsky, A&S senior, has been elected president of the Pep Club to succeed Verna Satterlee.Others elected are Marilyn Arnoult, vice-president; and Crystal Seeber, secretary-treasurer. Both are A&S sophomores. Adlai Backers To March; 'Ike' Man, Leland, Heard Adlai-lke Backers "Loyola Men for Stevenson," the campus organization backing the Illinois governor for president, held its first organizational meeting Tuesday. "We organized to plan strategy and campaigns for the coming Presidential election and for Stevenson's speech on Beuregard square Friday night," stated Gil Satterlee, A&S senior, the newly elected chairman of the group. George Reinecke, instructor in English, is the faculty moderator. The club attended a Volunteers for Stevenson rally which was held Wednesday night at Stevenson's headquarters to represent Loyola's interest in the Illinois governor. Bernard Ward, instructor in law, will bus kue»t speaker at a Stevenson rally at noon today in Marquette auditorium. After Ward'i speech there will be a general diicutaion on election issue*. "We must make the students think and investigate the facts," Satterlee stated. "It is up to us, the Loyola men for Stevenson, to enlighten those minds which Edwin A. Leeland, Jr., city campaign manager of "Americans for Eisenhower," gave campaign pointers to an interested Loyola group Tuesday. "We expect Loyolans to take action in this election crusade," he said. "There is something for everybody to do. We'll need a lot of help at the polls, for the flying squadrons, and in the emergency crews on November 4. This is the type of work that young collegians qualify for." Students interested in this movement may register this afternoon in the 'Americans for Eisenhower" booth in the quadrangle. It is not necessary to be of voting age. Monday they will go down to greet Gen. Eisenhower in a group. Besides the other work mentioned, Loyola coeds may join the telephone committee, by which all students here are contacted, and the baby sitters committee for election day. Co-chairmen for the Loyola branch of "Americans for Eisenhower" are Kent Satterlee and George Kelly. Dr. Andrew L. Romeo, moderator. 30 Loyolans Participate In Oil Week Thirty Loyolans will act as "Oilmen for a Day" Thursday, October 17 as part of the program of "Oil Progress Week" October 13- 17. The students representing arts and sciences, business administration, and the law school will be divided in groups of three and will tour the surrounding oil-fields, administration offices, bulk plants and refineries. Traveling by plane and boat they will be accompanied by Dr. Rudolf R. Coper, and Allen J. Boudreaux, BA professors. A banquet will be held at the Petroleum club on St. Charles and Commercial pi. on the night of October 17 in closing the celebration of "Oil Progress Week." The students will be guests at the supper. Those chosen are: Joseph Berrigan, Wilfred Boudreaux, Baron Bourg, John Holla han, and Robert Mcintosh from the law school. Anthony Capritto, Joseph Comeaux, Ronald Courtney, William Deeves, Ray Garofallo, Elizabeth Hanford, Gene Hymel, Martin Kelly, Andy McGinty, Andrew Martin, Marcel Monie, Joe Perez, Wil Prados, Ralph Redmann, and Mario Valasquez from BA. Adrian Cordez, Lee Freeland, Thomas Gavin, Elwood Gonzales, Jules Hebert, James Hemstreet, Louis Kieffer, Maurice Masparo, Jack Newitt, and Charles Stearns from A&S. •-• Sodality Heads Plan Semester Activities A meeting of the ten Sodality Prefects to arrange the activities' of the sodalities for the coming semester will be held Friday October 10, the Rev. SamtHill Ray S.J., announced. The meeting will be held in Father Ray's office at B p.m. "Since this is the month of thl Holy Rosary, the students are asked to help promote the daily rosary which is recited every noon in Holy Name Church," Father Ray said. Paul Guma New Leader Of Capers Paul Guma, professor of clarinet and woodwind ensemble, has been appointed director of Campus Capers by the Rev. Anthony C. O'Flynn, S.J., dean of students.A graduate of LSU, Guma succeeds J. B. Whillock in his new position. In 1935 he became the national guitar champion and later, as a clarinetist, he was one of the five Louisianians to play before Leopold Stowkowski. While in the service, Guma had complete charge of the Army Air Force Band of New Orleans, Boston and Memphis. It was during that time that he wrote a musical show for a war bond drive. "The purpose of Campus Capers," the new director said, "is to have a student entertainment group on the campus." Plans for the group's radio shows are not definite, nor have the members been selected yet. Last year the Capers group appeared at several Army camp shows, at local high schools, and weekly over radio station WWL. APO Moderator Appointment of Henry W. Asher, Jr., public relations staff member, as moderator of Alpha Pi Omicron, service fraternity, was announced by the Rev. Anthony C. O'Flynn, S.J., dean of students. (See COUNCIL, Page 8) (See ROTC, page 8) (See BOOSTERS, page 8) Vote Student Council Vote Student Council
Object Description
| Title | Maroon |
| Masthead | The Maroon Vol. 30 No. 2 |
| Publisher | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Coverage | United States; Louisiana; New Orleans; |
| Date | 1952-10-10 |
| Type | Text |
| Source | Loyola University New Orleans Special Collections & Archives (http://library.loyno.edu/research/speccoll/) New Orleans, LA |
| Format | TIFF |
| Subject | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Rights | Digital rights are held by Loyola University New Orleans. Copyright is retained in accordance with U.S. copyright law. |
| Creator | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Relation-Is Part Of | http://www.louisianadigitallibrary.org/cdm/search/collection/LOYOLA_UMN |
| Language | en |
| Digitized By | BSLW |
| Digitized Date | 2012-2013 |
| Contact Information | For information or permission to use/publish, contact: mailto:archives@loyno.edu |
| Rating |
Description
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Maroon
